POLS 324 ISSUES IN NUCLEAR SECURITY POLICY SPRING 2017

Similar documents
CONTriBuTOrS. İzak Atiyas is a professor of European studies and coordinator of the MA

Steven P. Andreasen Bruce G. Blair Matthew Bunn Sidney D. Drell

Reykjavik Revisited Conference Participants

Strategic Studies Seminar

Political Science 101: Global Nuclear Politics

Political Science 154: Weapons of Mass Destruction

IR 342 The Politics and Strategy of Weapons of Mass Destruction

Weapons of Mass Destruction in World Politics

Dr. R.D. Hooker, Jr., Dr. David Auerswald Dr. Charles L. Barry John P. Caves, Jr., 377

P U R D U E U N I V E R S I T Y. POL 237: MODERN WEAPONS AND INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS Spring 2015

A SELECTED SCORECARD THE ADMINISTRATION S FOREIGN AND TRADE POLICY ONE YEAR IN: OMAHA AMBASSADORS FORUM PRESENTS SPRING 2018

PLS 302 Syllabus. Dr. Aspin (aspin at bradley.edu) World Security 488 Bradley ( )

OCCASIONAL REPORT: Center for Arms Control, Energy and Environmental Studies, Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology

Stanton Nuclear Security Fellows Seminar

Nuclear Weapons. Dr. Steinar Høibråten Chief Scientist. Norwegian Defence Research Establishment. NKS NordThreat Asker, 31 Oct.

Associate Professor, Department of International Affairs, Bush School of Government and Public Service, Texas A&M University, 2016-Present

Nuclear Weapons and International Politics

Created by Paul Hallett

INTERNATIONAL ATOMIC ENERGY AGENCY 58TH GENERAL CONFERENCE (22 26 September 2014)

SEMINAR ON NUCLEAR PROLIFERATION, NONPROLIFERATION, AND COUNTERPROLIFERATION NS 4280

Nuclear Science and Security Consortium: Advancing Nonproliferation Policy Education

MICHAEL LEVI Non-Resident Science Fellow, Foreign Policy Studies The Brookings Institution

India s Nuclear Safeguards: Not Fit for Purpose

Autonomous weapons systems as WMD vectors a new threat and a potential for terrorism?

The Origins of Modern Wars GOV-1732

Tanvi Madan. The Brookings Institution, Washington DC Research Analyst with Stephen P. Cohen and James B. Steinberg (July 2003 July 2006)

INTRODUCTION. Costeas-Geitonas School Model United Nations Committee: Disarmament and International Security Committee

Stanton Nuclear Security Fellows Seminar

Fellow for Science and Technology, Council on Foreign Relations, New York, NY (2006-)

ADVANTAGES OF A MULTILATERAL APPROACH TO THE VERIFICATION OF FUTURE NUCLEAR DISARMAMENT ACTIVITIES David Cliff, Researcher

September Mr President

The Biological Weapons Convention

Disarmament and Arms Control An overview of issues and an assessment of the future

The Atomic Age History 105A - Spring 2007

June 6 9, 2016 Alexander Glaser Princeton University. CVT Consortium for Verification Technology. Revision 2

OUTER SPACE WEAPONS, DIPLOMACY, AND SECURITY. AlExEi ARbATOv AND vladimir dvorkin, EDITORS

Contributing Authors Peter M. Beck

GEM. Group of Eminent Persons

curriculum vitae Name: Dong-Won KIM Date of Birth: June 14, 1960 Nationality: Korea, Republic of

City University of Hong Kong

The Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) reports that there were more than 15,000 nuclear warheads on Earth as of 2016.

the Politics of Nuclear Weapons

TOWARD MULTILATERAL NUCLEAR ARMS CONTROL VERIFYING CAPS IN THE NUCLEAR ARSENALS AND REDUCTIONS TO LOW NUMBERS

DISEC Combating Proliferation of the Chemical and Biological Weapons with Emphasis on the Risk of Acquisition by the Non-State Actors

International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Study Guide

PUBLIC POLICY AND NUCLEAR THREATS BOOT CAMP 2017 PARTICIPANTS

National Student Leadership Conference International Diplomacy Session 1: June 24, 2018 July 3, 2018

April 10, Develop and demonstrate technologies needed to remotely detect the early stages of a proliferant nation=s nuclear weapons program.

-Check Against Delivery- - Draft - OPCW VISIT BY THE INSTITUTE FOR HIGH DEFENSE STUDIES (INSTITUTO ALTI STUDI PER LA DIFESA) OPENING REMARKS BY

Jay C. Shambaugh. Yale College September May 1992 B.A. in Ethics, Politics, and Economics, Cum Laude, distinction in the major

Sid Drell: Beyond the Blackboard Physics of Nuclear Weapons. Raymond Jeanloz University of California, Berkeley

Ch 26-2 Atomic Anxiety

A World Free of Nuclear Weapons

The Biological Weapons Convention and Resolution 1540

Détente and Its Collapse in the 1970s: Lessons for Today? Friday, November 6, 2015

FMCT VERIFICATION THE ROLE OF NON-INTRUSIVE APPROACHES. Geneva Centre for Security Policy, Maison de la Paix, March 5, 2018

A World Free of Nuclear Weapons

TREATY VERIFICATION CHARACTERIZING EXISTING GAPS AND EMERGING CHALLENGES REVIEW, CVT THRUST AREA 1, NOVEMBER 29, 2017

Prospects for Nuclear Power After Fukushima

2004 Summer Seminar Speakers 4 July 30 July 2004

A nuclear weapons convention

Yale University Department of Political Science. Syllabus MILITARY POWER Political Science 140/674 Global Affairs 381 (Seminar) Spring 2012

Harvard Kennedy School of Government

CANDIDATE STATEMENTS For Chair-Elect Allan Hoffman Background: Statement: Mark Sakitt Background:

Global Perspectives on Enterprise Systems

Institute for Public Diplomacy & Global Communication

Emerging Security Challenges Division NATO

ORGANISATION FOR THE PROHIBITION OF CHEMICAL WEAPONS

19 TH CENTURY U.S. HISTORY TOPIC: GILDED AGE/PROGRESSIVE ERA HIST 457/557 WINTER 2017 MW, 2:00-3:20

REMOVING THE PERIL OF NUCLEAR WEAPONS THE REYKJAVIK-2 APPROACH

The Manhattan Project (NCSS8)

Educate New Generation on Nuclear Technology through Collaborating Engineering Project

ROBERT D. SLOAN Freret Street New Orleans, LA New Orleans, LA

ARH 021: Contemporary Art

CORNELL GLOBAL SOLUTIONS CASE STUDY PRESENTATION

12. Conclusions. I. Progress. Nicholas Zarimpas

EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE. David Wan. Maureen Betses. President & Chief Executive Officer. Executive Vice President, Higher Education

S&T themes considered by States Parties

Engineering Systems Analysis for Design. Introduction

NUCLEAR WEAPONS PROHIBITION NEGOTIATIONS 27-31MAR, JUNE15-JULY7

SYSTEM ANALYSIS & STUDIES (SAS) PANEL CALL FOR PAPERS

Fall n September 28, 2012, NNSA completed its Transparency Monitoring Office (TMO) operations in Novouralsk, Russia.

Research, dual-use and export control. An initiative for raising awareness and compliance

Students To Write Newspaper for Main Unit Assignment The War Has Just Ended

The IAEA s role in defining and promoting Nuclear Security. Dr Columba Peoples

POSC 236 Global, National and Human Security --- Spring Class time: Thursday, Thursday 1:15-3:00. Weitz Center 233. Prof Greg Marfleet

The Honorable Susan E. Rice Former National Security Advisor and U.S. Ambassador to the UN

Japan Institute of International Affairs Atoms for a Sustainable Future Taskforce, Phase II

Harvard Kennedy School of Government

AI for Global Good Summit. Plenary 1: State of Play. Ms. Izumi Nakamitsu. High Representative for Disarmament Affairs United Nations

The College of William and Mary History The Nuclear World

International Confidence to Japanese Nuclear Activities

St. Louis. around the country. February 24, 2011

STS 350 Atomic Consequences Spring 2002

PHIL 20628/STV 20228/IIPS 20912/HESB Ethics of Emerging Weapons Technologies Spring 2017

THE IMPORTANCE OF MULTILATERAL VERIFICATION FOR ARMS CONTROL AND DISARMAMENT. Hassan Elbahtimy Researcher VERTIC

DANIEL C. ESTY. Center for Business & Environment at Yale, New Haven, CT building academic and research program at the business-environment interface

Revolutions in Science and Technology HSS 201 Fall 2009, KAIST Wednesday & Friday, 11:00 am -12:15 pm N4 Building 1124

ELLIOT E. MAXWELL 5001 Worthington Drive Bethesda, Maryland PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE

CD/1895 Conference on Disarmament 14 September 2010

Transcription:

POLS 324 ISSUES IN NUCLEAR SECURITY POLICY SPRING 2017 Instructor : Prof. Dr. MUSTAFA KİBAROĞLU Class Hours: Tuesday 15:00-17:50 (A307) Office Hour: Tuesday 13:30-14:30 (5 th Floor) Course Description: This course is supported by The Stanton Foundation, created by Dr. Frank Stanton, in Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA with a grant offered to Prof. Kibaroğlu as part of its Course Development Program in the fields of International and Nuclear Security. MEF University is the first university outside of the United States and it is listed among the world s best universities, such as Brown, Cornell, George Washington, Georgetown, Texas A&M, and Virginia Tech that received Stanton Foundation s grant to date. The primary objective of this course is to introduce the undergraduate students of the Political Science and International Relations Department to a number of existing and emerging threats to international security and stability in the 21 st Century. In that context, dangers associated with the proliferation of nuclear weapons and their delivery vehicles, such as ballistic missiles; the current status of the nuclear non-proliferation regime and the NPT; the military and political implications of Iran s nuclear program for the Middle East; India s and Pakistan s nuclear capabilities and the arms race in the Sub- Continent; North Korea s nuclearization and its implications for regional security in the Far East; safety and security problems that arise in connection with the nuclear arsenals in the former Soviet republics; illegal trafficking of nuclear material, know-how and technology used in the manufacture of nuclear weapons; and the possibility of unauthorized seizure of such material by terrorist groups and their possible implications for nuclear security will constitute the main themes of the course. One important distinguishing feature of this course will be the world-renowned scholars from the leading academic institutions who will be invited as guest lecturers to share their impeccable knowledge and experience in the above-mentioned topics with our students. Reading Material: Students will be provided with book chapters and journal articles written by the leading authorities in the field, which will be available in the Black Board system of MEF University, most of them will also be accessible on-line through the websites designated by Prof. Kibaroğlu as well as his personal website (www.mustafakibaroglu.com). Selected chapters from the following authors books will constitute the essential readings:..albright, David, Frans Berkhout, William Walker, Plutonium and Highly Enriched Uranium 1996, Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, London, 1997..Allison, Graham T., Nuclear Terrorism: The Ultimate Preventable Catastrophe, Times Books, New York, 2004..Allison, Graham T., Owen R. Cote, Richard A. Falkenrath, and Steven E. Miller, Avoiding Nuclear Anarchy, The MIT Press, Massachusetts, MA., 1996..Aytaç, Osman and Mustafa Kibaroğlu (Eds.), Defense Against Weapons of Mass Destruction Terrorism, IOS Press, Amsterdam, 2009

..Blackaby, Frank, Joseph Rotblat, Jack Steinberger, and Bhalchandra Udgaonkar, A Nuclear-Weapon-Free World: Desirable? Feasible? Westview Press, Boulder, Colorado, 1993..Fischer, David, Towards 1995: The Prospects for Ending the Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons, United Nations Institute for Disarmament Research, Dartmouth, 1993..Muller, Harald, David Fischer, and Wolfgang Kotter, Nuclear Non-Proliferation and Global Order, Oxford University Press, London, 1994..Prawitz, Jan and James F. Leonard (Eds.), A Zone Free of Weapons of Mass Destruction in the Middle East, UNIDIR Research Report, No. 96/24, New York & Geneva, 1996..Reiss, Mitchell and Robert S. Litwak (Eds.), Nuclear Proliferation After the Cold War, Woodrow Wilson Center, Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, 1994..Sagan, Scott D., and Kenneth N. Waltz, The Spread of Nuclear Weapons: A Debate, W. W. Northon Company, New York, 1995..Shields, John and William C. Potter (Eds.), Dismantling the Cold War, The MIT Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts, MA., 1997 Recommended Web Portals: Arms Control Association Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists Carnegie Endowment for International Peace Center for Nonproliferation Studies Center for Strategic and International Studies Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty Organization Council on Foreign Relations Federation of American Scientists Henry L. Stimson Center International Atomic Energy Agency International Institute for Strategic Studies Nuclear Suppliers Group Nuclear Threat Initiative The Stanton Foundation Stockholm International Peace Research Institute Union of Concerned Scientists www.armscontrol.org www.bullatomsci.org www.ceip.org cns.miis.edu www.csis.org www.ctbto.org www.cfr.org www.fas.org www.stimson.org www.iaea.org www.iiss.org www.nsg-online.org www.nti.org www.thestantonfoundation.org www.sipri.se www.ucsusa.org Course Requirements: There are basically three requirements that must be fulfilled successfully by the students to get a passing or a higher letter grade. First requirement is to attend classes and to participate in class discussions, which will count for 10% of students overall grade. Students will be expected to read the assigned articles and chapters before coming to class for a fruitful discussion in the classroom; Second requirement is to take the Mid-Term Exam on 02 May 2017, which will count for 40% of students overall grade; Third requirement is to participate in a Policy Research Project (PRP) that will require a good deal of research, which will count for 50% of students overall grade. For completing the PRP successfully, students will be expected to conduct comprehensive research on the current as well as the would-be positions of a number of countries (from North America, Europe, Middle East, Latin America, Africa, and the Asia-Pacific, each to be undertaken by different students) with respect to the issues that will be debated in the run up to and during the 2020 NPT Review Conference. Progress reports about the PRP will have to be submitted to the instructor every three weeks and an in-class presentation will have to be made at the end of the semester, most possibly during the week of the final exams. 2

Important Warning: Cheating during the Mid-Term Exam will NOT be tolerated. Students will not be allowed to use any audio-visual electronic recording devices during the class discussions, unless otherwise permission is given by the Instructor. Those responsible for acts of cheating or unauthorized recording will be subject to disciplinary rules of MEF University beyond getting an "F" grade from the course. WEEKLY SCHEDULE: WEEK 01: Tuesday, February 7 Topic: General introduction to the course topics and the PRP Reading: Syllabus WEEK 02: Tuesday, February 14 Topic: Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons: Emergence and Evolution of the Problem Reading: David Fischer, Towards 1995: The Prospects for Ending the Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons, United Nations Institute for Disarmament Research, Dartmouth, 1993, pp. 3-15. Reading: Harald Muller, David Fischer and Wolfgang Kötter, Nuclear Non-Proliferation and Global Order, Oxford University Press, New York, 1994, pp. 15-30. WEEK 03: Tuesday, February 21 Topic: Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons: Emergence and Evolution of the Problem (cont d) Reading: David Fischer, Towards 1995: The Prospects for Ending the Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons, United Nations Institute for Disarmament Research, Dartmouth, 1993, pp. 55-96. Reading: David Kay, The IAEA: How Can It Be Strengthened?, in Mitchell Reiss and Robert S. Litwak (Eds.), Nuclear Proliferation after the Cold War, Woodrow Wilson Center, Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, 1994, pp. 309-333. Reading: John Carlson, Is the Additional Protocol 'Optional'? www.nti.org. WEEK 04: Tuesday, February 28 Topic: Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons: Regions of Concern Reading: Shai Feldman, Nuclear Weapons and Arms Control in the Middle East, MIT Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1997, pp. 39-93. Reading: Muhammad Ismail, Iran s Nuclear Program: Regional Implications & Possible Outcomes, Asian Politics & Policy, Policy Studies Organization, Vol. 7, No. 2, 2015, pp. 245 263. WEEK 05: Tuesday, March 07 Topic: Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons: Regions of Concern Reading: Peter R. Lavoy, Managing South Asia s Nuclear Rivalry: New Policy Challenges for the United States, Nonproliferation Review, Center for Nonproliferation Studies, Monterey, CA, Vol. 10, No. 3, Fall-Winter 2003, pp. 84-94 (updates available on-line). Reading: Alexander Mansourov, The Origins, Evolution and Current Politics of the North Korean Nuclear Program, Nonproliferation Review, Center for Nonproliferation Studies, Monterey, CA, Vol. 2, No. 3, Spring-Summer 1995, pp. 25-38 (updates available on-line). WEEK 06: Tuesday, March 14 Topic: Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons: Prospects for Reversing Proliferation Reading: Sagan D. Scott and Kenneth N. Waltz, The Spread of Nuclear Weapons: A Debate, W. W. Northon Company, New York, 1995, pp. 1-92. 3

Topic: Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons: Prospects for Reversing Proliferation (cont d) Reading: Frank Blackaby, Joseph Rotblat, Jack Steinberger, and Bhalchandra Udgaonkar, A Nuclear-Weapon-Free World: Desirable? Feasible? Westview Press, 1993, pp. 52-82. Reading: Mustafa Kibaroğlu, "EURATOM & ABACC: Safeguard Models for the Middle East?" in Jan Prawitz and James F. Leonard (Eds.), A Zone Free of Weapons of Mass Destruction in the Middle East, UNIDIR Research Report No.96/24, 1996, New York & Geneva, pp. 93-123. WEEK 07: Tuesday, March 21 Topic: Safety and Security of WMD Related Material and Technology Reading: John Shields and William C. Potter (eds.), Dismantling the Cold War, MIT Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1997, pp. 1-39. Reading: David Albright, Frans Berkhout, William Walker, Plutonium and Highly Enriched Uranium 1996, Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, London, 1997, pp. 3 25. Reading: Plutonium: Management and Disposition of Excess Weapons, National Academy of Sciences, Washington, D. C., 1994, pp. 1-18. WEEK 08: Tuesday, March 28 Topic: Safety and Security of WMD Related Material and Technology Reading: Matthew Bunn, Securing the Bomb 2008, Harvard University & Nuclear Threat Initiative, Cambridge, MA, & Washington DC, 2008, pp. v-xix (updates available on-line). Reading: William C. Potter and Elena Sokova, Illicit Nuclear Trafficking in the NIS: What s New? What s True?, Nonproliferation Review, Center for Nonproliferation Studies, Monterey, CA, Vol. 9, No. 2, Summer 2002, pp. 112-120 (updates available on-line). WEEK 09: Tuesday, April 04 Topic: Threat of Terrorism with Nuclear Weapons and Countermeasures Reading: Graham T. Allison, Owen R. Cote, Richard A. Falkenrath, Steven E. Miller, Avoiding Nuclear Anarchy, MIT Press, 1996, pp. 21 48. Reading: Lewis A. Dunn, Defending Against Nuclear Terrorism: Future Threats and Concepts, in Osman Aytaç and Mustafa Kibaroğlu (Eds.), Defense Against Weapons of Mass Destruction Terrorism, IOS Press, Amsterdam, 2009, pp. 135-146. WEEK 10: Tuesday, April 11 Topic: NPT Review Conferences: Past, Present & Future Guest Lecturer: Prof. Dr. Harald Muller, Frankfurt University WEEK 11: Tuesday, April 18 Topic: Safety and Security of Nuclear Material & Threat of Nuclear Terrorism Guest Lecturer: Prof. Dr. William C. Potter, Monterey Institute, California WEEK 12: Tuesday, April 25 Topic: Advance of Populist Politics on the Future of the Nuclear Nonproliferation Regime Guest Lecturer: Prof. Dr. Steve Miller, Harvard University WEEK 13: Tuesday, May 02 MIDTERM EXAMINATION WEEK 14: Tuesday, May 10 Topic: Impact Nuclear Security Policies on the Future of Peaceful Uses of Nuclear Energy Guest Lecturer: Mr. William Magwood, Director General, Nuclear Energy Agency, OECD 4

Résumé of Prof. Dr. Mustafa Kibaroğlu Prof. Dr. Mustafa Kibaroğlu (Ph.D., Bilkent University, International Relations Department, 1996) is currently the Chair of the Department of Political Science & International Relations, Director of the Institute of Social Sciences, and the Director of the Center for International Security Studies and Strategic Research (MEF Strategy) at MEF University in Istanbul. He used to be the Chair of Department of International Relations at Okan University in Istanbul between September 2011 and July 2014. Prof. Kibaroğlu taught courses on Arms Control & Disarmament, Turkish Foreign Policy and Middle East Security in the Department of International Relations at Bilkent University in Ankara from 1997 to 2011 where he was the Vice-Chair of the Department. Prof. Kibaroğlu was a Research Fellow at the United Nations Institute for Disarmament Research in Geneva (1995); International Atomic Energy Agency Fellow at the University of Southampton (1996); Post-doctoral Fellow at the Monterey Institute in California (1996/97); and Sabbatical Fellow at the Belfer Center of Harvard University (2004/05). Prof. Kibaroğlu is the co-author of Global Security Watch Turkey (2009) by Praegers in the United States, and the co-editor of Defence Against Weapons of Mass Destruction Terrorism (2010), Bioterrorism: Threats and Deterrents (2010), Responses to Nuclear and Radiological Terrorism (2011), Defence Against Terrorism (2011), and Analysis and Strategies to Counter the Terrorism Threat (2011) by IOS Press in Netherlands. He is also the author and co-author of numerous chapters in books and articles in academic journals, such as Security Dialogue, Nonproliferation Review, Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, Middle East Quarterly, Middle East Journal, Brown Journal of World Affairs, Middle Eastern Studies, Korean Journal of Defense Analysis, Turkish Studies, Middle East Policy, and Journal of Balkan and Near Eastern Studies. Prof. Kibaroğlu used to be the Academic Advisor of the NATO Centre of Excellence Defence Against Terrorism (COE-DAT) between January 2006 and January 2013. In the meantime he was the Editor-in-Chief of Defence Against Terrorism Review (DATR) published by COE-DAT. Prof. Kibaroğlu is a Council Member of the 1995 Nobel Peace Prize winner Pugwash Conferences on Science and World Affairs since October 2007. He is also a Distinguished Member of Sectoral Working Group at the ROKETSAN Missile Industries since February. Research interests of Prof. Kibaroğlu are proliferation of weapons of mass destruction, NATO, European security and defense policies, international terrorism, Middle Eastern politics, foreign policy analysis, and Turkish foreign policy. Prof. Kibaroğlu speaks French and English and he is married to Prof. Dr. Ayşegül Kibaroğlu (MEF University, Department of Political Science and International Relations) and has one son. 5